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Toxic Mold & Disease
Asthma has increased 300 percent
in children in the past ten years. Research by WHO,
in Germany, finds prostate cancer, breast cancer,
and other cancers increasing due to mold-related
problems.
Asthma has increased 300 percent
in children in the past ten years. Research by WHO,
in Germany, finds prostate cancer, breast cancer,
and other cancers increasing due to mold-related
problems.
Mold is the number one health problem
with one in every three persons affected by mold
and one in ten with a severe problem related to
mold. These can range from the common cold, tonsillitis,
otitis, sinusitis, bronchitis, asthma, and pneumonia,
to cancer.
Check your home's humidity levels; buy or borrow
a hygrometer and watch the changes in R.H. that
occur throughout a typical day in different rooms
of the house and over the heating season. To inspect
your home for mold growth, winter is the best time
except for basements which should also be inspected
in the summer. With a flashlight and some simple
tools, go through the entire house, both inside
and outside, searching for moisture damage and mold
growth and their potential causes.
The Stachybotrus species of mold
is dangerous; it will start growing in 80 percent
humidity but, once established, can grow at 55 percent
humidity. This mold can develop from the decay of
building materials and is much harder to control.
If more than ten square feet develop, it is advised
that a professional clean it up. When you see a
small speck of mold, that's only part of the problem
- the remainder being inside the walls.
'Frog Page' is a manual of the health
of the environment and states that frogs are declining
because of mold.
Some of the causes of mold are brush
and trees within 30 feet of the building; venting
the clothes drier inside the home; furniture against
outside walls; old fill, causing building movement
leading to cracks causing water ingress; concrete
will wick up water even to several feet above ground;
ventilation not directed outside, such as the kitchen
range hood, which should be vented outside; plants
and aquariums; drying clothing indoors; standing
water, such as keeping cold water in the kitchen
sink; hot tubs; using several gallons of water to
wash floors.
'Sick Building Syndrome' is caused
by moisture and mold growth. It migrates through
foundations up from the soil. A dehumidifier is
not the final answer as it only does the air and
not the walls. What is required is a combination
of ventilation, circulation, and heat.
Carpenter ants and termites will
smell moisture from miles away and they only attack
damaged wood.
Ventilation alone won't help a crawl
space. In the summer the vents bring in warm, moist
air.
Mold forms on the coldest space.
The only
way to deal with it is with heat. Wall heaters with
fans are more efficient than baseboard heaters.
Pull furniture and store material
away from exterior walls and off basement floors;
leave closet doors ajar; leave bedroom doors open
as much as possible; undercut doors; don't block
or deflect warm air registers; open drapes, blinds,
and curtains; set the furnace fan to run continuously.
This will use more electricity but can be offset
by installing a two-speed energy-efficient motor;
don't cut off the heating supply or close off unused
rooms.
Uninsulated or poorly insulated
areas such as exterior corners or foundation walls,
should be improved with additional insulation. Be
sure to install an air-vapor barrier, usually polyethylene,
on the room side of the insulation to prevent hidden
condensation behind the insulation. Seal hidden
opening into the attic, tighten the attic hatch,
weatherstrip and caulk around windows and doors,
gasket electrical outlets, caulk baseboards and
seal the top of foundations. Using an air conditioner
on muggy summer days also helps take out the moisture.
Humidifiers, dehumidifiers, air-conditioning
units and filtration systems can be a source of
mold growth if they are not regularly cleaned.
Key areas to check for moisture
sources leading to condensation inside the home
are roof leaks [especially at chimneys, flashings,
skylights and eavestroughing; wall leaks [especially
at window and door flashing and sills; foundation
leaks [especially where the ground slopes toward
the foundation; and plumbing leaks [especially at
toilet bases and under sink drains.
Check any fuel-burning equipment
- furnaces, hot water heaters, boilers, fireplaces,
and wood stoves - to ensure that they are venting
properly. A blocked chimney could mean that combustion
products, including large amounts of water vapor,
are spilling into your house. Along with that moisture
come dangerous combustion gasses, such as carbon
monoxide, which cause deaths every year. Have heating
equipment and venting systems checked by a trained
service person.
If your moisture remedial work includes
extensive air sealing, be sure that all fuel-burning
equipment has an adequate supply of combustion air.
High efficiency furnaces, for example, have their
own air supplies and exhaust fans but conventional
equipment may rely on house air for combustion and
on 'natural draft' to move combustion products up
the chimney flue. If starved for air or overpowered
by an exhaust fan somewhere else in the house, such
equipment can spill combustion gasses indoors. Examples
of this include stains near the vent of a gas water
heater, smoke entering the room from a wood-burning
fireplace or stove, and pilot lights being blown
out.
Mold growth often occurs in out-of-the-way
areas like closets, corners, walls behind furniture
and unused rooms. Increasing air circulation to
these areas warms the cold surfaces and lowers local
humidity levels.
To solve moisture problems, cover
any exposed earth in a crawl space or basement with
heavy polyethylene, sealed and weighted-down; slope
soil away from foundations to keep basement walls
and slab dry; patch any foundation leaks; don't
use humidifiers, unless humidity levels are below
30 percent R.H.; avoid drying firewood indoors;
operate bathroom exhaust fans during a bath or shower;
use your range hood exhaust when cooking; avoid
steam-cleaning carpets in winter; clean mold from
wood and gyproc with a 10 percent to 30 percent
solution of hydrogen peroxide applied with a spray
bottle. This is more effective than bleach and water.
If you use chlorine bleach, mix
one part bleach with two parts water and a little
detergent to clean nearby surfaces. Leave for 15
minutes and rinse well. Use gloves, protective glasses
and a tight-fitting dust mask, along with good ventilation.
Persons with any respiratory problems should not
perform clean-up or be in the clean-up area. Children
and pets should not be allowed access. Soiled curtains,
clothing, linens and any other washable materials
should be removed and cleaned. Badly mildewed carpets,
furnishings and books will probably need to be thrown
out.
Molds are parasitic micro-organisms
that appear as black, white or multi-colored stain
or fuzz. In addition to causing asthma, they can
cause other allergies and serious health problems.
There are tens of thousand of varieties of molds
and are difficult and expensive to identify, even
for experts. Health officials recommend eliminating
all molds from inside your home.
Most mold spores need condensation
or damp materials to germinate and once are established,
many colonies generate their own moisture and can
continue to survive even under dry conditions. They
also need mild temperatures and a source of food,
such as house dust or drywall paper.
Resources:
1. Natural Resources Canada [NRCan
"Air-Leakage Control" Pg. 11 [20 Feb 2002
2.WHO [World Health Organization
[20 Feb. 2002
3.Cormier, Dr. Y., Centre de Recherche, Hopital
Laval, 2725 Chemin Ste-Foy, Ste Foy, Quebec Canada,
G1V-4G5, Institut de Recherche en Sante et Securite
du Travail (IRSST), Quebec Canada, July 21, 1999;
revised; accepted for publication November 26, 1999.
4. 20 Feb. 2002
5. 20 Feb.2002
6. http://water.usgs.gov/pubs/FS/fs-043-01/
[20 Feb. 2002